4.3 Article

Changes of Bacterial Communities in Response to Prolonged Hydrodynamic Disturbances in the Eutrophic Water-Sediment Systems

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16203868

Keywords

bacterial community; water disturbance; 16S rRNA; dissolved oxygen; nutrients; resuspension; racetrack-style flume; lake Chaohu; Exiguobacterium; hgcI_clade

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51809226, 21607123, 51909229, 51909230]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2018M632390]
  3. natural Science Foundation of the Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions of China [18KJB610022, 18KJD570001]
  4. Xuzhou Science and Technology Innovation project [KC16SG283]

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The effects of hydrodynamic disturbances on the bacterial communities in eutrophic aquatic environments remain poorly understood, despite their importance to ecological evaluation and remediation. This study investigated the evolution of bacterial communities in the water-sediment systems under the influence of three typical velocity conditions with the timescale of 5 weeks. The results demonstrated that higher bacterial diversity and notable differences were detected in sediment compared to water using the 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The phyla Firmicutes and gamma-Proteobacteria survived better in both water and sediment under stronger water disturbances. Their relative abundance peaked at 36.0%, 33.2% in water and 38.0%, 43.6% in sediment, respectively, while the phylum Actinobacteria in water had the opposite tendency. Its relative abundance grew rapidly in static control (SC) and peaked at 44.8%, and it almost disappeared in disturbance conditions. These phenomena were caused by the proliferation of genus Exiguobacterium (belonging to Firmicutes), Citrobacter, Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas (belonging to gamma-Proteobacteria), and hgcI_clade (belonging to Actinobacteria). The nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) and Venn analysis also revealed significantly different evolutionary trend in the three water-sediment systems. It was most likely caused by the changes of geochemical characteristics (dissolved oxygen (DO) and nutrients). This kind of study can provide helpful information for ecological assessment and remediation strategy in eutrophic aquatic environments.

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